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Check & test & build PocketBase

Project

This repository contains community-maintained Go SDK for Pocketbase API. It's well-tested and used in production in Coinpaprika, but not all endpoints are covered yet.

Status

I'm looking for passionate and dedicated individuals to help maintain this project.

UPDATE: actively maintained fork: https://github.com/pluja/pocketbase

Compatibility

  • v0.13.0 version of SDK is compatible with Pocketbase v0.13.x and higher
  • v0.12.0 version of SDK is compatible with Pocketbase v0.12.x
  • v0.11.0 version of SDK is compatible with Pocketbase v0.11.x
  • v0.10.1 version of SDK is compatible with Pocketbase v0.10.x
  • v0.9.2 version of SDK is compatible with Pocketbase v0.9.x (SSE & generics support introduced)
  • v0.8.0 version of SDK is compatible with Pocketbase v0.8.x

PocketBase

Pocketbase is a simple, self-hosted, open-source, no-code, database for your personal data. It's a great alternative to Airtable, Notion, and Google Sheets. Source code is available on GitHub

Currently supported operations

This SDK doesn't have feature parity with official SDKs and supports the following operations:

  • Authentication - anonymous, admin and user via email/password
  • Create
  • Update
  • Delete
  • List - with pagination, filtering, sorting
  • Other - feel free to create an issue or contribute

Usage & examples

Simple list example without authentication (assuming your collections are public):

package main

import (
	"log"

	"github.com/r--w/pocketbase"
)

func main() {
	client := pocketbase.NewClient("http://localhost:8090")
	response, err := client.List("posts_public", pocketbase.ParamsList{
		Page: 1, Size: 10, Sort: "-created", Filters: "field~'test'",
	})
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	log.Print(response.TotalItems)
}

Creating an item with admin user (auth via email/pass). Please note that you can pass map[string]any or struct with JSON tags as a payload:

package main

import (
	"log"

	"github.com/r--w/pocketbase"
)

func main() {
	client := pocketbase.NewClient("http://localhost:8090", 
		pocketbase.WithAdminEmailPassword("[email protected]", "[email protected]"))
	response, err := client.Create("posts_admin", map[string]any{
		"field": "test",
	})
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	log.Print(response.ID)
}

For even easier interaction with collection results as user-defined types, you can go with CollectionSet:

package main

import (
	"log"

	"github.com/r--w/pocketbase"
)

type post struct {
	ID      string
	Field   string
	Created string
}

func main() {
	client := pocketbase.NewClient("http://localhost:8090")
	collection := pocketbase.CollectionSet[post](client, "posts_public")
	response, err := collection.List(pocketbase.ParamsList{
		Page: 1, Size: 10, Sort: "-created", Filters: "field~'test'",
	})
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	
    log.Printf("%+v", response.Items)
}

Realtime API via Server-Sent Events (SSE) is also supported:

package main

import (
	"log"

	"github.com/r--w/pocketbase"
)

type post struct {
	ID      string
	Field   string
	Created string
}

func main() {
	client := pocketbase.NewClient("http://localhost:8090")
	collection := pocketbase.CollectionSet[post](client, "posts_public")
	response, err := collection.List(pocketbase.ParamsList{
		Page: 1, Size: 10, Sort: "-created", Filters: "field~'test'",
	})
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	
	stream, err := collection.Subscribe()
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	defer stream.Unsubscribe()
	<-stream.Ready()
	for ev := range stream.Events() {
		log.Print(ev.Action, ev.Record)
	}
}

More examples can be found in:

Development

Makefile targets

  • make serve - builds all binaries and runs local PocketBase server, it will create collections and sample data based on migration files
  • make test - runs tests (make sure that PocketBase server is running - make serve before)
  • make check - runs linters and security checks (run this before commit)
  • make build - builds all binaries (examples and PocketBase server)
  • make help - shows help and other targets

Contributing

  • Go 1.20+ (for making changes in the Go code)
  • While developing use WithDebug() client option to see HTTP requests and responses
  • Make sure that all checks are green (run make check before commit)
  • Make sure that all tests pass (run make test before commit)
  • Create a PR with your changes and wait for review